The Mapuche and the Chilean State (1818-1830)

The Mapuche and the Chilean State (1818-1830)

Crow, J. (2017). Troubled Negotiations: The Mapuche and the Chilean State (1818-1830). Bulletin of Latin American Research, 36(3), 285–298. https://doi.org/10.1111/blar.12481 Peer reviewed version Link to published version (if available): 10.1111/blar.12481 Link to publication record in Explore Bristol Research PDF-document This is the author accepted manuscript (AAM). The final published version (version of record) is available online via Wiley at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/blar.12481/full. Please refer to any applicable terms of use of the publisher. University of Bristol - Explore Bristol Research General rights This document is made available in accordance with publisher policies. Please cite only the published version using the reference above. Full terms of use are available: http://www.bristol.ac.uk/red/research-policy/pure/user-guides/ebr-terms/ Troubled Negotiations: The Mapuche and the Chilean State (1818-1830) JOANNA CROW University of Bristol This paper explores the complex, dynamic relationship that developed between the Mapuche and Chilean state authorities in the first decades following independence from Spain. The greater part of Mapuche society supported royalist forces during the independence wars, but there were also several leaders who allied themselves with the patriot insurgents and, after the latter’s victory, entered into negotiations with the fledgling Chilean republic. This paper investigates the intricacies of these negotiations and, in so doing, draws out some notable continuities between the colonial period and the early independence era. It focuses on the language(s) of negotiation – delving into what Mapuche and Chilean authorities were saying about and to one another – and on the symbolic significance of the parlamentos (mass-meetings) , in order to demonstrate that Chile could have adopted an alternative model of government to the (centralist) one we know now. Keywords: Chilean state, Mapuche, negotiations, confrontation, indigenous autonomy, border, parlamentos This article shows how integral the Mapuche were to the process of state building in newly independent Chile. The Mapuche achieved legendary status in the Americas for being one of the only indigenous peoples to defeat the Spanish conquistadors on the battlefield and to remain effectively autonomous throughout the colonial period. (During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the Spanish crown signed more than twenty treaties which recognised the Bío-Bío River as the official border between the Kingdom of Chile and Mapuche territory.) The Mapuche were still an autonomous people at the time of the independence wars. The starting point for my article therefore diverges from that of much of the recent scholarship on indigenous peoples’ participation in the construction of Latin America’s postcolonial nation-states (e.g. Echeverrí, 2011; Guardino, 1996; Méndez, 2005; Walker, 1999). This rich historiography shows us how indigenous groups bargained and compromised with, as well as resisted, the elites who were directing the state-making projects. It encourages us to understand indigenous actions as ‘practical strategic consciousness’ (Echeverrí, 2011: 243), rather than ignorance or naivety (a story too frequently accepted by the traditional historiography). Practical strategic consciousness is exactly what we see in the primary material documenting Mapuche actions during the independence wars, as they bartered with both royalist and patriot forces, and during the early republican period, as they interacted with various components of the recently founded state. The difference – of vital importance for comparative analysis – is that the Mapuche (south of the Bío-Bío River) did this not as a colonised sector of society, not as labourers for creole hacendados or mine owners, but as an autonomous and prosperous people, with their own recently expanded territory (Klubock, 2014: 14; Mallon, 2011: 283). Consequently, issues such as the payment of Indian head-tax, which were paramount for many indigenous peoples in post-independent Latin America, did not affect the Mapuche in Chile. The Mapuche were not unique, however. Other ‘unconquered Indians’, who signed treaties with the Spanish, included the Guajiro of Riohacha in New Granada, and the Apache and Comanche in northern Mexico and the south-western United States (see Gutiérrez, 2011; O’Hara, 2010; and Hämälänein, 2008). Nor were the Mapuche limited to Chile, for their agricultural activities, trade routes, and military power extended across the Andes into the Argentine plains. These were also home to the Telhuelche and Ranquel peoples, who likewise negotiated with colonial and republican state authorities (Bechis, 2008; Martínez Sarasola, 2010). In line with the present special issue’s aim to study the early nineteenth century in its own terms, it is crucial that we appreciate the language and practice of Chilean- Mapuche relations as part of this broader continental reality. The modern state in Latin America and beyond was under construction; its composition, purpose and mechanisms were still being defined, and diplomatic negotiations with indigenous populations were far from anomalous. As outlined by Guillaume Boccara (1999), Jorge Pavez (2008), and Cristián Martínez (2010), Mapuche society in the early nineteenth century was highly fragmented. During the colonial period, an increasingly smaller number of lonkos (caciques or leaders) took control of increasingly larger geographical areas. In other words, Mapuche society became a more cohesive social unit than it had been before the Spanish conquest, developing an intricate system of alliances between leaders, but within this larger confederation there still existed one hundred or so different groups or factions (Herr, 2014), which acted independently of (and on many occasions in opposition to) one another. Chile was by no means the only state with which this diverse people interacted. Traversing back and forth across the cordillera, Mapuche leaders were in constant dialogue with government authorities in Buenos Aires (and in Mendoza, San Luis and Córdoba). They also conversed with representatives of several European governments, not least the British and French. This article makes occasional reference to such interactions, but it focuses primarily on Mapuche-Chilean relations. The greater part of Mapuche society supported the royalists during the wars of independence, but there were several prominent leaders who sided with the rebel patriot forces (Bengoa, 1985; Hux, 1992; Martínez, 2010). Previous literature also tells us of lonkos who switched sides during the conflict, or who professed backing both sides at the same time. Not surprisingly, once the military struggle was over (by 1818 in northern and central Chile), the Mapuche dealt with the fledgling republic in equally diverse ways. This article concentrates on Mapuche leaders who decided that the best way to protect their self- interests (i.e. to maintain and indeed possibly extend their local power base and wealth) was to negotiate with the Chilean state. These leaders moved around and between Mapuche and Chilean territory – travelling to different Mapuche communities (to inform about recent parlamentos with Chilean officials), to Santiago (to speak with government authorities), to Concepción, Talcahuano, Yumbel and other towns in the Chilean-controlled part of the frontier zone (to participate in parlamentos) – and thereby acted as cross-border agents, who simultaneously transgressed and reinforced the border. Today, Chile is a highly centralised state, which shows perhaps the least regard for indigenous rights in the continent. Its constitution does not recognise the existence of indigenous peoples (only ethnic groups), its ‘multicultural’ legislation is notoriously weak (and constantly contravened by mega- development projects), and scores of Mapuche political activists remain in prison on charges of terrorism despite protests from international human rights organisations. One of the key points that I want to make in the following pages is that this decline towards dispossession and exclusion was not necessarily anticipated in the 1820s. Chilean state building, like the story of colonial encounter that Pekka Hämälänein tells in The Comanche Empire, was a dialectical process ‘rather than a preordained sequence’ of events (Hämälänein, 2009: 6). During the early independence period, some political leaders imagined a national community that functioned as a shared social space, which included, without assimilating, indigenous cultures (Casanova, 2000; Marimán, 2012; Pinto, 2003). Indeed, Pablo Marimán suggests that there was a legitimate attempt at this time to ‘conceive of multiple governing powers (Coquimbo-Santiago-Concepción-Mapuche territory)’ as if Chile were a ‘confederation of nations’ (Marimán, 2012: 67; unless otherwise stated, all translations from Spanish to English are my own). This article investigates how that shared social space functioned, paying particular attention to the language that both held it together, and intimated its constraints and limitations. It returns to the debates and disagreements of the Chilean political and military elites, in order to re-centre the federalist project as a significant path that was not taken, and to explain what the federalist project looked like vis- à-vis the Mapuche. It discusses foreign observers’ narrative imaginings of criollo-Mapuche relations. It also incorporates as much as possible indigenous Mapuche

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